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Eye on the Empire
by Alan Bock
Antiwar.com
December
  6, 2000
Making
  Lemonade
Given
  how odd and virtually unprecedented the Florida Follies are in a presidential
  election, any prediction should be guarded and qualified. But at this point
  � and the stock market seems to agree � it almost looks as if it is
  all over but the whining and Dubya will be the next president. Even though the
  Florida Supreme Court could modify Florida Circuit Judge Sanders Saul�s decision
  not to grant Team Gore an official contest, even an official contest is not
guaranteed to find enough votes to turn the tide.
Some
  commentators and some of Mr. Gore�s lawyers have warned that with open records
  historians and activists will be poring through the original materials and could
  easily come up with the decision that Mr. Gore won more votes in Florida after
  all. That may be, and certainly many in the Gore camp sincerely and with only
  minimal partisan self-spinning believe it will be the case. But it seems unlikely
  that this would happen without at least some dimpled or pregnant chads being
  counted, which would be controversial. It is probably best to think of this
  as a tie to be decided by the rules in place at the time or a coin flip, won
  by Mr. Bush � or, though the odds seem increasingly lengthy, Mr. Gore.

Either
  way, the legitimacy of the new president � or at least his ability to claim
  anything resembling a mandate from the people or even the voters (remember that
  half the eligibles couldn�t bring themselves to participate in the vulgar
electoral
  sweepstakes) � will be severely limited. That is the most fundamental fact
  to emerge from such a tight election: that neither candidate stirred enough
  enthusiasm or loyalty to win, so that in a real sense both lost. One will have
  the levers of power but something far short of the confidence of the people.
CURBING
  IMPERIAL POWER
This
  is very good news for those who believe the United States should move toward
  a less aggressive and more peaceful and sensible foreign policy. In the absence
  of a clear-cut crisis � Russia declaring war and lobbing a missile, China
  trying to take Taiwan by military force or firing a missile at Los Angeles,
  Osama Bin Laden organizing a major paramilitary action rather than a discrete
  terrorist strike against a key strategic target or against U.S. civilians �
  a president needs a certain base of secure support before undertaking a military
  action or initiative in another country.
Given
  the bitterness engendered on all sides by the current denouement to November
  7, a president of either party is likely to face a significant level of organized
  opposition in Congress to almost any foreign adventure short of response to
  an attack. The opposition might not be enough to vote down an administration
  plan or to deny funding, but it is likely to be enough to make almost any move
  controversial and therefore somewhat more politically risky.
BUSH
  MARGINALLY LESS DANGEROUS?
If
  Mr. Bush is president the situation is likely to be better for supporters of
  a noninterventionist foreign policy. The kind of bitter-ender Democrats in
Congress
  who will feel cheated for years are also likely to question foreign adventures;
  indeed, some of them have already been mildly vocal in questioning the Clinton
  administration�s intervention in Colombia (a bit more on that later and a lot
  more in a future column). Congressional Democrats questioning a Bush
administration
  initiative are more likely to find sympathetic ears and sounding boards in the
media than congressional Republicans questioning Gore initiatives, so it will
  be easier to organize both the reality and the appearance of solid opposition
  to almost any initiative a Bush administration might attempt.
The
  bottom-line reality, however, is that the next president will have less
flexibility
  in foreign affairs than has been the case in recent decades. It is finally sinking
  in that the Cold War is over and that global engagement is optional rather than
  mandatory (we�re talking general perceptions, not necessarily mine) for the
  United States. What thoughtful critics of the right, left and center have dubbed
  the Imperial Presidency was closely tied to the perception that the United States
  was engaged in a global struggle from which it could not afford to withdraw,
  and that the president as chief foreign policy officer needed a great deal of
  freedom of action (regardless of quaint relics like the US Constitution) to
  manage that engagement on a day-today basis.
Dubya
  has some experienced people around him, but he simply doesn�t give off the aura
  of an engaged global strategist who needs to be given his head to assure US
  success in the international arena. Algore doesn�t either, of course, but in
  terms of foreign policy the deer-in-the-headlights look is more subversive of
  imperial power than the air of a kindergarten teacher speaking slowly so his
  less-than-bright class will get it. The good news is that neither looks like
  a Master of the World in the imperial mold. The better news is that Dubya fits
  the mold even less than Algore.
There�s
  also the fact that while the differences were relatively slight, in terms of
  policy the Bush team showed evidence of being slightly more skeptical of foreign
  adventures than the Gore team. If Gore beats the odds and gets in he may still
  have his utopian vision that the United States should be proactive in areas
  like environmental degradation and political economic stability overseas and
  get involved even before trouble breaks out, but it will be politically difficult
  for him to put this vision into action, if only because of Republican bitter-enders
  in Congress who will oppose his every move. And it will be easy to make fun
  of the vision.
If
  it�s the Bushlet, however, critics of interventionism will be able to emphasize
  areas they have in common with "realists" of the Wolfowitz or Rice
  stripe. A Bush team is unlikely to rush into "humanitarian" interventions
  and might even be drawn into discussions of pulling back current commitments,
  perhaps in Kosovo and perhaps even in intensity of involvement in international
  organization like NATO.
POSSIBLE
  DANGER SIGNS
It
  may not be all smooth sailing for foes of US over-intervention, however. Machiavelli
  was not the first, though he may have been the most explicit and memorable of
  the writers who recommended to a Prince facing opposition, trouble or hostility
  at home to get involved in some manageable foreign adventure as a way of uniting
  the country, neutralizing opposition, occupying public attention and justifying
  more controls on political activity. Either a Gush or a Bore looking at deadlock
  in Congress, constant sniping from the opposition and the media, lukewarm support 
from allies and the general impression that he went to all that trouble and
  self-denial only to be treated with disrespect, might well look longingly at
  some foreign conflict where a resolution or even involvement might buy him surcease
  from sniping or even a dramatic increase in the esteem in which American hold
  him.
Among
  the most likely temptations for a President Bush might be Saddam Hussein. He
  is and remains a handy target for American presidents of the sort that might
  have to be invented if he didn�t exist. And for the Bush team, both advisers
  and family to different degrees, the notion that Saddam is still standing still
  rankles. Some dramatic action against Iraq, probably short of a new Gulf War
  but more intense than the low-level daily overflights and occasional bombing
  might seem like a good way to establish Team Dubya as a force to be reckoned
  with in the world, and settle some personal scores.
It
  seems important, therefore, to continue to remind US policymakers that the embargo
  against Iraq is on the verge of disintegrating, with grey-market goods increasingly
  finding their way through and countries like France and Russia working actively
  for formal lifting of the embargo. Among the questions to be raised in that
  context are whether it is more important to maintain decent relations with major
  powers like Russia than to punish a brutal but minor dictator. It will also
  be important to emphasize arguments against embargoes and sanctions in general, 
especially those that point out the relative ineffectiveness of economic sanctions.

Dick
  Cheney, while in the private sector (working for a company that profited from
  oil commerce, to be sure), contributed to a Cato Institute seminar on sanctions,
  arguing a bit more than a year ago that it was time to rethink sanctions against
  Iraq. He might or might not agree when in power in government, but those words
  should be resurrected and repeated as often as possible.
QUESTIONING
  COMMITMENTS
If
  proponents of a less aggressive US foreign policy are smart, questioning sanctions
  will not be simply a way to avert action against Saddam and Iraq, but woven
  into a larger fabric of questioning US commitments overseas. Part of the reason
  military morale is low, for example, is because of ill-defined, under-financed
  social-worker commitments overseas that are potentially dangerous but not what
  most people join the military for. Some Republican strategists are already 
questioning
  how smart it is to keep troops more or less forever, on imperial rather than
  military missions, in Bosnia and Kosovo in the aftermath of Madeleine and Bill�s
  unnecessary and unsuccessful war. We should encourage such questions and work
  to expand them into a more thoroughgoing reassessment of the proper role of
  the United States in a post-cold war world as a question that ought to be resolved 
before the matter of whether the military is underfunded can even be considered
  intelligently.
Although
  certain Republicans are unregenerate and unreflective drug warriors, the new
  intervention into the ongoing Colombian civil war in the name of drug control
  should also be subject to questioning. Perhaps Republican � or even Democratic
  if it goes that way � big-picture thinkers can be brought around to the
  idea that a president without a solid mandate might do better to preside over
  a period of reflection and reassessment of current domestic and foreign commitments
  to establish a record of thoughtful, realistic and constructive action before
  facing election again.
There�s
  much more to be considered, but for those seeking a new approach to foreign
  policy the current stalemate and new stalemates to follow offer unusual opportunities
  to have real influence on future policies. We might blow it or events might
  torpedo the opportunity. But if we don�t recognize the opportunity and seek
  intelligently and persistently to exploit it we will have to answer to our 
grandchildren.
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The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
tasks is to spread the demystification and desanctification of the
State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
repeatedly and in depth that not only the emperor but even the
"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
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the exploiting rulers and the exploited ruled.  He seeks to show that
the task of the court intellectuals who have always supported the State
has ever been to weave mystification in order to induce the public to
accept State rule and that these intellectuals obtain, in return, a
share in the power and pelf extracted by the rulers from their deluded
subjects.
[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
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